Dorsey v. Dorsey ( 2013 )


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  • [Cite as Dorsey v. Dorsey, 
    2013-Ohio-4237
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR MONTGOMERY COUNTY, OHIO
    VICKI S. DORSEY                                        :
    Plaintiff-Appellee                             :        C.A. CASE NO.      25436
    v.                                                     :        T.C. NO.    09LS23
    WILLIAM R. DORSEY, D.O.                                :            (Civil appeal from Common
    Pleas
    Court, Domestic Relations)
    Defendant-Appellant                            :
    :
    ..........
    OPINION
    Rendered on the        27th       day of      September      , 2013.
    ..........
    CHARLES D. LOWE, Atty. Reg. No. 0033209, 8087 Washington Village Drive, Suite 102,
    Dayton, Ohio 45458
    Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellee
    JOHN D. SMITH, Atty. Reg. No. 0018138 and ANDREW P. MEIER, Atty. Reg. No.
    0083343, 140 N. Main Street, Suite B, Springboro, Ohio 45066
    Attorneys for Defendant-Appellant
    ..........
    FROELICH, J.
    {¶ 1} William R. Dorsey, D.O., appeals from a final judgment and decree of
    2
    divorce filed by the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations
    Division, which awarded a divorce to Dr. Dorsey and his wife, Vicki Dorsey, divided the
    parties’ assets, and addressed other matters.
    {¶ 2}     For the following reasons, the judgment of the trial court will be affirmed in
    part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings.
    I
    {¶ 3}     William and Vicki Dorsey were married in 1982. In 2009, Ms. Dorsey
    filed a complaint for divorce, and Dr. Dorsey filed a counterclaim for divorce. The two
    children born of the marriage were emancipated prior to the divorce. The parties agreed to
    treat July 1, 2010 as the date of the “de facto” termination of the marriage for the purpose of
    dividing their assets. The parties agreed on the manner in which some assets would be
    divided, and the division of other assets was determined by the trial court. The trial court
    entered its Final Judgment and Decree of Divorce in 2012.
    {¶ 4}     The issues of property division that are pertinent to this appeal are as
    follows: Dr. Dorsey retained his medical practice, but was ordered to pay one-half of its
    value to Ms. Dorsey. Each party was awarded his or her primary vehicle. However, Ms.
    Dorsey’s car, a Mercedes, was owned by Dr. Dorsey’s medical practice. The value of the
    car was included in the value of the medical practice, which was divided between the parties;
    Dr. Dorsey received a credit of $27,000 “toward the ultimate property settlement,
    representing the income tax liability [to his practice] that will result from the transfer of the
    title to the Mercedes to the wife.” The trial court valued the Mercedes at $50,000, which it
    found to be the fair market value, although the car was on the books of the medical practice
    3
    at a value of $73,172.
    {¶ 5}     The trial court determined that Dr. Dorsey’s life insurance policy had a cash
    surrender value of $728,106 as of the end of the marriage and Ms. Dorsey had a policy with
    a cash surrender value of $4,946 as of the same date; it ordered that the values of these
    policies be divided equally.
    {¶ 6}     The parties had a Fifth Third securities account that was valued at the time
    of the divorce at $152,365. The trial court found, however, that Dr. Dorsey had previously
    “inappropriately” withdrawn $100,000 from this account. The court awarded the account to
    Ms. Dorsey ($152,365) and ordered Dr. Dorsey to pay her an additional $50,000
    representing half of the funds he withdrew.
    {¶ 7}     Finally, the trial court retained jurisdiction over the parties’ 2011 federal
    and state income tax refunds.
    {¶ 8}     Dr. Dorsey raises two assignments of error on appeal from the trial court’s
    judgment. The first assignment of error states:
    {¶ 9}     THE     TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DIVIDING THE PARTIES’
    PROPERTY.
    {¶ 10}    Dr. Dorsey raises issues with respect to the values the trial court assigned to
    Ms. Dorsey’s Mercedes and to his life insurance policy, the credit he was given in exchange
    for the Mercedes, and the manner in which the trial court divided a Fifth Third securities
    account.
    {¶ 11}    A trial court has broad discretion in determining an equitable property
    division in divorce cases. Berish v. Berish, 
    69 Ohio St.2d 318
    , 319, 
    432 N.E.2d 183
     (1982),
    4
    citing Cherry v. Cherry, 
    66 Ohio St.2d 348
    , 355, 
    421 N.E.2d 1293
     (1981); Kapp v. Kapp, 2d
    Dist. Clark No. 2003-CA-9, 
    2005-Ohio-6830
    , ¶ 21. However, if the trial court abuses that
    discretion, a reviewing court may modify or reverse the property division. Berish at 319. A
    trial court abuses its discretion when it makes a decision that is unreasonable, arbitrary, or
    unconscionable. Blakemore v. Blakemore, 
    5 Ohio St.3d 217
    , 219, 
    450 N.E.2d 1140
     (1983).
    {¶ 12}    Dr. Dorsey’s argument with respect to the Mercedes is threefold: 1) he
    claims that the trial court should have valued the vehicle at $73,172, because that was its
    “book value” at his medical practice; 2) he asserts that Ms. Dorsey should more fully share
    the burden of the “taxable event” created by the transfer of the car out of his practice; and 3)
    he contends that, when the trial court divided the value of the medical practice equally, it
    gave Ms. Dorsey half of the book value of the car, rather than half of the fair market value,
    and that he was entitled to a credit for half the difference between these two amounts.
    {¶ 13}    All of Dr. Dorsey’s arguments about the Mercedes start with the premise
    that the trial court should have used the Mercedes’s book value, rather than its fair market
    value, in its calculations. He has cited no authority for this position, and we are aware of
    none. Traditionally, the book value of an asset is its cost less depreciation, whereas fair
    market value is the amount for which the property would change hands between a willing
    buyer and a willing seller on the open market. See Vadakin v. Vadakin, 4th Dist. Washington
    No. 95CA49, 
    1997 WL 325319
    , fn. 4 (June 11, 1997), citing Black’s Law Dictionary (5th
    Ed.1979) 165.      “[T]here is often times little correlation between ‘book value’ and ‘fair
    market value.’” 
    Id.
    {¶ 14}    Moreover, an automobile is not depreciable when owned by an individual
    5
    (or individuals), but it often is depreciable when held by a business. The Dorseys – or the
    medical practice entity – enjoyed tax advantages by choosing to title the Mercedes in the
    business’s name, which would otherwise have been unavailable to them, although the parties
    acknowledge that little, if any, use of the car related to the business. The parties’ choice to
    title the car in this manner, and to depreciate it, does not present a compelling reason for the
    trial court to use the book value, rather than the fair market value, for purposes of property
    division in the divorce. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in valuing this asset at its
    fair market value.
    {¶ 15}    Dr. Dorsey further argues that Ms. Dorsey should have been required to
    share the burden of the “taxable event” created by the transfer of the car out of his practice.
    {¶ 16}    Conflicting evidence was presented about the ways in which the car might
    have been transferred to Ms. Dorsey in the divorce and the tax ramifications (if any) of those
    options. Based on the assumptions that the fair market value of the car was $50,000 and the
    outstanding debt on the car was $18,000, Dr. Dorsey’s expert, Candace DeClark Peace,
    stated that the transfer of the car out of the practice would create “a net gain of 32,000.”
    DeClark Peace further testified that, at an effective tax rate of 45%, Dr. Dorsey would have
    to earn $58,000 to “have the $32,000 differential left to pay the company.” She testified
    that, if, alternatively, Ms. Dorsey purchased the car from the practice, there would be no
    taxable event.
    {¶ 17}    The Mercedes, as well as a Lincoln Navigator and a Lexus, were on the
    books of the practice at the time of the divorce. The trial court ordered that the Navigator
    would remain an asset of the practice; the Lexus was awarded to Dr. Dorsey. There was no
    6
    testimony about the various “values” of the Lexus. Ms. Dorsey’s expert, John R. Bosse,
    stated that the book value of the Navigator was zero, but its “Blue Book” value was over
    $11,500. (Ms. Dorsey has suggested that she should get some credit for the fair market
    value of the cars awarded to Dr. Dorsey or maintained by the medical practice in the
    divorce.) Bosse acknowledged that the Mercedes had a book value of $73,172, and that a
    loan on this vehicle was still reflected on the practice’s books. He stated that the debt on
    the Mercedes could be accounted for “on the personal side” or “within the corporation.”
    Bosse did not testify about the tax consequences, if any, of transferring the Mercedes out of
    the practice.
    {¶ 18}   After finding that that the fair market value of the Mercedes was $50,000,
    and that this amount was included in the value of Dr. Dorsey’s medical practice, the trial
    court further stated: “Husband shall cause the [practice] to transfer title, free of any debt, to
    Wife; and Husband shall receive a credit of $27,000 toward the ultimate property settlement,
    representing the income tax liability that will result from the transfer of the title to the
    Mercedes to Wife.”
    {¶ 19}   Based on the evidence presented and the trial court’s statements, the
    reasonableness of the trial court’s findings with respect to the Mercedes cannot be
    determined. For example, the trial court referred to a “tax liability” of $27,000, but no
    evidence was presented that the transfer of the Mercedes would require Dr. Dorsey or the
    corporation to pay $27,000 in taxes. Rather, DeClark Peace testified that the transfer would
    result in the realization of a “net gain” of $32,000 and that Dr. Dorsey paid an effective tax
    rate of 45%. DeClark Peace testified that Dr. Dorsey would need to earn $58,000 to net
    7
    $32,000 (presuming he were required to pay the practice that amount).             Dr. Dorsey
    discussed a $26,000 differential in his brief, a calculation which may rely on these numbers
    ($58,000 - $32,000 = $26,000). However, both the trial court’s Decision and the Final
    Judgment and Decree of Divorce erroneously equate a “taxable event” with the amount of
    tax owed as a result of that event. Neither expert quantified how much Dr. Dorsey would
    be required to pay in taxes on any gain and, although DeClark Peace testified that Dr. Dorsey
    would have to earn $58,000 to “pay the tax, to have the $32,000 differential left to pay the
    company,” no evidence was presented that he would, in fact, be required to reimburse the
    practice for this diminution in value.
    {¶ 20}     Ms. Dorsey states in her brief that she believed the $27,000 credit awarded
    to Dr. Dorsey in exchange for the transfer of the Mercedes represented (roughly) half of its
    fair market value, and that she was willing to pay this amount rather than quibble over the
    difference between $25,000 and $27,000, because it was “close enough.”       However, we are
    unable to determine by what reasoning and calculations the trial court arrived at its decision
    to credit Dr. Dorsey with $27,000.
    {¶ 21}    Finally, Dr. Dorsey argues that, when the trial court divided the value of the
    medical practice equally, it gave Ms. Dorsey half of the book value of the Mercedes, rather
    than half of the fair market value; he contends that, in doing so, the court overcompensated
    Ms. Dorsey, and that he was entitled to a credit for half the difference between these two
    amounts. We share Dr. Dorsey’s concern that the trial court may have double-counted some
    or all of the value of the Mercedes by awarding Ms. Dorsey the car and half of the value of
    the medical practice, without seeming to account for the fact that the Mercedes was included
    8
    in the value of the medical practice.
    {¶ 22}       In sum, we are unable to follow the trial court’s reasoning or to determine
    whether the trial court abused its discretion in awarding a $27,000 credit to Dr. Dorsey to
    offset the award of the Mercedes to Ms. Dorsey. We will reverse the trial court’s judgment
    with respect to this asset and remand for the trial court to recalculate or provide a more
    complete explanation for its distribution of the value associated with the Mercedes.
    {¶ 23}       Dr. Dorsey also contends that the trial court abused its discretion in
    calculating the value of his life insurance policy.
    {¶ 24}       Dr. Dorsey’s life insurance policy provided coverage of $4 million. An
    annual premium payment of $102,760 was paid on March 25 of each year. According to a
    document presented by each party and prepared by Country Life Insurance Company, the
    cash value of the policy as of July 25, 2011, was $608,066.67, and the cash surrender value
    on the same date was $830,866.68. Dr. Dorsey also attached an email to his trial exhibit in
    which he asked an agent of Country Financial 1 about the “cash surrender value” of the
    policy as of July 1, 2010, the date the parties had agreed to use as the end of the marriage.
    The agent’s email in response indicated that the “cash value” of the policy was $486,139.04
    as of July 1, 2010, and the “total cash value” was $686,731.27 as of that date. Ms. Dorsey
    did not object to the email portion of Dr. Dorsey’s exhibit or refute the values reflected
    therein, except to note, on appeal, that the email uses the term “total cash value” rather than
    1
    Some of the documents offered into evidence are on the letterhead of “Country Financial,” and others are on
    letterhead of “Country Insurance and Financial Services.” Neither party has asserted that the distinction, if any, is relevant.
    9
    “cash surrender value.”2
    {¶ 25}        The parties also disputed whether the portion of the premium that was
    “unearned” as of July 1, 2010, should have been deducted from the value of the policy
    before the policy was divided between the parties. The “earned” portion of the premium
    was the portion attributable to the period from March 25, 2010, when the premium was paid,
    through July 1, 2010, the de facto end of the marriage; the “unearned” portion was the
    portion of the premium payment that covered the cost of the policy from July 1 through the
    payment of the next premium on March 25, 2011, a period outside the marriage according to
    the parties’ agreement to distribute assets as of July 1, 2010.                                The parties do not dispute
    that the portion of the premium attributable to the period from July 1 through March 25,
    each year, is $75,356.99. Dr. Dorsey argued that the “unearned premium” should have been
    deducted from the cash surrender value of the policy. But Ms. Dorsey claimed that, because
    the March 2010 premium had been paid from marital assets, there was no reason to deduct
    the unearned premium from the value of the life insurance policy.
    {¶ 26}        In the trial court, Dr. Dorsey argued, based on the email from the Country
    Financial agent, that the value of the insurance policy was $686,731.27 on July 1, 2010, less
    the unearned premium as of July 1, 2010 ($75,356.99), for a policy value of $611,374.28.
    Ms. Dorsey argued that the “only evidence” of the value of the policy was the value on July
    2
    Ms. Dorsey argues in her brief that “[t]here is a difference between the terms “cash surrender value” and “total cash
    value” as used in the email, but she does not identify the difference. She then states that Dr. Dorsey “fails to distinguish between
    the two values.” In our view, based on the question about “cash surrender value” posed in the email, and a comparison of the
    values offered by the insurance company as of July 1, 2010, and July 25, 2011, there is no genuine question that the “total cash
    value” reflected in the email response correlates to the “cash surrender value.”
    10
    25, 2011 ($830,866.68), from which the March 2011 annual premium payment ($102,760)
    should have been deducted, for a total value of $728,106.68.
    {¶ 27}   The trial court stated that the cash surrender value of the policy would be
    “divided equally * * * as of July 1, 2010, plus or minus interest, gains or losses associated
    therewith until the date of division.”     But its calculation of the value of the policy
    ($728,106) appears to have been based on the values presented as of July 25, 2011. The
    court seems to have used the cash surrender value as of July 25, 2011 ($830,866.68), and
    deducted from it the March 2011 annual premium ($102,760) to arrive at the policy value of
    $728,106 ($830,866.68 - $102,760 = $728,106.68). This is the calculation advocated by
    Ms. Dorsey. However, this calculation cannot reasonably be viewed as being based on the
    value of the policy as of July 1, 2010, especially in light of the unrefuted evidence from
    Country Financial, offered by Dr. Dorsey without objection, that the cash surrender value as
    of July 1, 2010, was $686,731.27.
    {¶ 28}    The trial court had broad discretion regarding the admissibility of evidence.
    Preston v. Shutway, 
    2013-Ohio-185
    , 
    986 N.E.2d 584
    , ¶ 22 (2d Dist.). For example, it
    might have rejected the email offered by Dr. Dorsey as evidence of the July 1, 2010, value of
    the policy for evidentiary reasons. However, the record of this case reflects no such concern
    about this evidence. Moreover, if the trial court had rejected this evidence, it would have
    been forced to calculate the value of the policy using a date other than July 1, 2010, because
    there was no other evidence as to the value of the policy on that date. Ms. Dorsey’s
    calculation, which was adopted by the trial court and relied on the value of the policy as of
    July 25, 2011, less the price paid for the 2011 premium, might have represented a reasonable,
    11
    alternate date of valuation, in the absence of evidence about the value as of July 1, 2010.
    But the court did not expressly state, on the record, that it intended to calculate the value of
    the life insurance policy using a date other than the one used to calculate the value of all the
    other assets. Thus, we will remand the matter of the value of the life insurance policy to the
    trial court for recalculation or for explanation of its use of a date other than the “de facto” end
    of marriage in its calculation.
    {¶ 29}        The trial court did not expressly address the parties’ dispute about whether
    the unearned premiums should be deducted from the value of the policy. However, because
    the trial court could have reasonably concluded that the unearned portion of the premium was
    marital property, and thus that a deduction of this amount was unnecessary, we find no abuse
    of discretion in the trial court’s failure to deduct this amount or to expressly address this
    issue.
    {¶ 30}        Finally, Dr. Dorsey contends that the trial court erred in awarding a
    disproportionate share of the Fifth Third securities account to Ms. Dorsey. At the time of
    trial, this account had a value of $152,365, but the court found that Dr. Dorsey had previously
    withdrawn $100,000 from the account “inappropriately.”3                                   (The court did not characterize it
    as “financial misconduct,” as defined at R.C. 3105.171(E)(4).)                                         The court awarded the
    account to Ms. Dorsey and, additionally, ordered Dr. Dorsey to pay her $50,000 representing
    half of the funds he withdrew. In other words, Ms. Dorsey was awarded approximately
    $202,365 (the $152,365 in the account, plus $50,000) from an account that originally
    3
    It is unclear from the record why the trial court valued this asset at the time of trial, rather than as of July 1, 2010, but
    the parties do not object to the court’s use of the trial date. It is also unclear when Dr. Dorsey’s withdrawal occurred.
    12
    contained approximately $250,000, or about 80% of this account. Ms. Dorsey seems to
    concede that this division was unequal. But she says that this unequal division of the Fifth
    Third account was designed to offset Dr. Dorsey’s retention of “the non-divisible asset,” i.e.,
    his medical practice, or to reduce the amount he would have to pay to effectuate an equal
    division of the assets. In other words, Ms. Dorsey asserts that, although one asset may have
    been divided unequally, the award must be viewed as a whole.
    {¶ 31}    There is nothing in the record to suggest that the trial court intentionally
    awarded a disproportionate share of the Fifth Third account to Ms. Dorsey for either of the
    purposes she identifies. Ms. Dorsey was awarded half of the value of the medical practice,
    leaving no reason for her to be further compensated for Dr. Dorsey’s retention of this asset.
    And the court’s judgment expressly offsets other property awards before ordering Dr. Dorsey
    to make a payment to Ms. Dorsey to equalize the division; if the unequal treatment of the
    Fifth Third account were intended to reduce Dr. Dorsey’s payment to Ms. Dorsey, it would
    have been mentioned in the court’s discussion of “Equalization of Marital Assets,” and it was
    not. Throughout its judgment, the trial court took measures to equalize the distribution of
    assets. There is no basis to conclude that it intended to unequally distribute the Fifth Third
    account.
    {¶ 32}    The Fifth Third account originally contained approximately $250,000. It is
    unclear on what basis the trial court concluded that Dr. Dorsey’s withdrawal of $100,000 was
    “inappropriate,” but even if it were so, more than half of the funds remained, and Ms. Dorsey
    requested only that she receive half of the $250,000. Thus, each of the parties would have
    been entitled to approximately $125,000. It was unnecessary for Dr. Dorsey to repay any
    13
    funds to Ms. Dorsey to effectuate such a division. Moreover, in awarding Ms. Dorsey
    $152,000, the court awarded her more than half of the account, an error which was
    compounded by the court’s order that Dr. Dorsey repay $50,000 more to Ms. Dorsey. The
    court should have awarded $100,000 to Ms. Dorsey to offset Dr. Dorsey’s withdrawal, and
    then divided the remaining balance. Thus, each party would have – and should have – netted
    approximately $125,000 from this account. Because the trial court‘s disparate treatment of
    the Fifth Third account, without explanation, was not in accord with its handling of the
    parties’ assets in all other respects, we conclude that the trial court erred in its calculation.
    {¶ 33}    The first assignment of error is sustained.
    {¶ 34}    The second assignment of error states:
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN RESERVING JURISDICTION OVER THE
    PARTIES’ 2011 TAX RETURN.
    {¶ 35}    Dr. Dorsey claims that the trial court erred in retaining jurisdiction over the
    parties’ 2011 tax return (i.e., the division of the refund, if any) because no issue related to that
    return was before the court at the hearing.
    {¶ 36} In its decision, the court noted that Dr. Dorsey had received and retained the
    parties’ tax refunds for 2010, totaling over $37,000; to offset Dr. Dorsey’s retention of the tax
    refunds, Ms. Dorsey withdrew $10,000 from a marital account and charged $27,000 to a joint
    credit card, which Dr. Dorsey paid. Thus, the court noted that the parties had not amicably
    divided the previous tax return.
    {¶ 37}    In June 2012, Ms. Dorsey filed a motion that the trial court divide the 2011
    tax refunds, which she believed Dr. Dorsey had “somehow, converted * * * to his personal
    14
    use,” notwithstanding that the refund checks should have been payable to both parties.
    According to Ms. Dorsey, the parties were entitled to a $23,097 refund from their federal tax
    return and a $39,928 refund from their state return in 2011. She claimed that she was
    entitled to half of this amount, or $31,512.50.
    {¶ 38}    Dr. Dorsey emphasizes that the de facto end of the marriage was in 2010,
    that the 2011 tax return/refund was not addressed at the hearing, and that neither party
    “consented in writing” to the court’s retention of jurisdiction over this issue.           These
    arguments are unpersuasive, as the hearing occurred in 2011, before any tax return for that
    year could possibly have been filed, and the decree of divorce was not filed until October
    2012, even if the parties agreed to use an earlier date as the end of the marriage for purposes
    of division of property. Thus, the parties were married, under the law, throughout 2011, and
    Ms. Dorsey asserts that they filed joint tax returns for that year.
    {¶ 39}    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in treating the 2011 tax refunds as
    marital assets and in assuming that the parties would not agree on the distribution of those
    assets without the court’s involvement. Thus, the court did not abuse its discretion in
    retaining jurisdiction over this issue.
    {¶ 40}    The second assignment of error is overruled.
    {¶ 41}    The judgment of the trial court will be affirmed in part and reversed in part.
    This matter will be remanded for clarification of the court’s orders with respect to the
    distribution of the Mercedes and the valuation of Dr. Dorsey’s life insurance policy, and for
    redistribution of the Fifth Third account.
    ..........
    [Cite as Dorsey v. Dorsey, 
    2013-Ohio-4237
    .]
    DONOVAN, J. and WELBAUM, J., concur.
    Copies mailed to:
    Charles D. Lowe
    John D. Smith
    Andrew P. Meier
    Hon. Timothy D. Wood
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 25436

Judges: Froelich

Filed Date: 9/27/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021